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A Matter of Perspective: Comparison of the Characteristics of Persons with HIV Infection in the United States from the HIV Outpatient Study, Medical Monitoring Project, and National HIV Surveillance System

E-Mail Address of Dr. Kate Buchacz
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Emma L. Frazier
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. H. Irene Hall
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Rachel Hart
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Ping Huang
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Dana Franklin
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Xiaohong Hu
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Frank J. Palella
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Joan S. Chmiel
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Richard M. Novak
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Kathy Wood
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Bienvenido Yangco
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Carl Armon
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. John T. Brooks
acu7@cdc.gov
E-Mail Address of Dr. Jacek Skarbinski
acu7@cdc.gov
Abstract
Comparative analyses of the characteristics of persons living with HIV infection (PLWH) in the United States (US) captured in surveillance and other observational databases are few. To explore potential joint data use to guide HIV treatment and prevention in the US, we examined three CDC-funded data sources in 2012: the HIV Outpatient Study (HOPS), a multisite longitudinal cohort; the Medical Monitoring Project (MMP), a probability sample of PLWH receiving medical care; and the National HIV Surveillance System (NHSS), a surveillance system of all PLWH. Overall, data from 1,697 HOPS, 4,901 MMP, and 865,102 NHSS PLWH were analyzed. Compared with the MMP population, HOPS participants were more likely to be older, non-Hispanic/Latino white, not using injection drugs, insured, diagnosed with HIV before 2009, prescribed antiretroviral therapy, and to have most recent CD4+ T-lymphocyte cell count ≥500 cells/mm3 and most recent viral load test<2 00 copies/mL. The MMP population was demographically similar to all PLWH in NHSS, except it tended to be slightly older, HIV diagnosed more recently, and to have AIDS. Our comparative results provide an essential first step for combined epidemiologic data analyses to inform HIV care and prevention for PLWH in the US.
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Buchacz K, Frazier E, Hall H, Hart R, Huang P, Franklin D, Hu X, Palella F, Chmiel J, Novak R, Wood K, Yangco B, Armon C, Brooks J, Skarbinski J. A Matter of Perspective: Comparison of the Characteristics of Persons with HIV Infection in the United States from the HIV Outpatient Study, Medical Monitoring Project, and National HIV Surveillance System . Open AIDS J, 2015; 9: . http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1874613601509010123Article History
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Buchacz K, Frazier E, Hall H, Hart R, Huang P, Franklin D, Hu X, Palella F, Chmiel J, Novak R, Wood K, Yangco B, Armon C, Brooks J, Skarbinski J. A Matter of Perspective: Comparison of the Characteristics of Persons with HIV Infection in the United States from the HIV Outpatient Study, Medical Monitoring Project, and National HIV Surveillance System . Open AIDS J, 2015; 9: . http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1874613601509010123Export Citation
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© Buchacz ; Licensee et al.
Open-Access License: This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0), a copy of which is available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode. This license permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Address correspondence to this author at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road NE, MS E-45, Atlanta, GA 30329. USA; Tel: (404) 639-5167; E-mail: acu7@cdc.gov
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